Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5055520 | Economic Modelling | 2012 | 13 Pages |
In this article, we introduce a new theoretical international asset pricing model which accounts for partial financial market segmentation. We show that if some investors do not hold all international assets because of implicit and/or explicit segmentation factors, the world market portfolio is not efficient and the classic ICAPM must be augmented by a new factor reflecting the local risk undiversifiable internationally. We test this model empirically for a sample of emerging markets. Our findings show that the degree of market integration is time-varying and that the premium associated with the domestic risk factors is the most important component of the total risk premium. However, our results also show that most of the emerging markets we study have become more integrated in the end of our sample period as a result of liberalization and reforms.
âºIn finance literature, there are no theoretical models of market integration dynamics. âºWe propose a theoretical asset pricing model which accounts for partial segmentation. âºWe test this model for a sample of emerging markets. âºWe show that most of these markets have become more integrated in recent years.